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Sunil
Bharti Mittal, chairman of India's second-biggest mobile phone network,
says fishermen on the nation's southern coast are using cellphones while
at sea to call traders and find out who's paying the most for lobsters. He
is planning to stop that.
Instead, Mittal's company, Bharti Tele-Ventures, will offer the fishermen
a wireless Internet service that would provide up-to-date prices for their
catch and even allow them to book orders from their boats. In so doing,
the fishermen "will significantly increase their earnings," he
says.
Fishermen are not the only ones on Mittal's radar screen. In the next 12
months to 24 months, he plans to introduce technology that will enable
farmers to monitor weather conditions in real time on their mobile phones,
Mittal said at an Ernst & Young conference in Singapore last week.
The abysmal lack of communication facilities in rural areas has been,
until now, a source of some satisfaction to those who believe that by
progressively opening up the industry to private and foreign investors in
the past decade, India has only looked after the interests of privileged
city dwellers.
The naysayers, prominent among them the Indian Marxists who opposed the
government decision this month to allow foreign investors to raise their
stakes in telecommunications companies to a maximum of 74 percent, from 49
percent, should take notice as benefits of greater competition begin to
flow to the remotest regions - with private investors' money and not
government subsidies.
Reliance Infocomm, Bharti's bigger rival by subscribers, recently
announced that by the end of this year it would provide voice, data and
video access to 650 million Indians across 400,000 villages and 5,700
cities and towns. Reliance, which has 10.5 million subscribers, calls this
an attempt to bridge India's "digital divide."
Only 1.5
percent of people in rural India have access to telephones, compared with
25 percent in cities.
A glut in global bandwidth is helping to spread connectivity to rural
India. In partnership with Singapore Telecommunications, Mittal has set up
the world's biggest privately held undersea cable by capacity - an 8.4
terabit-per-second line joining India to Singapore.
Reliance Infocomm, a unit of the country's biggest nonstate company,
bought international capacity last year by acquiring the network of the
Bermuda-based Flag Telecom Group, which came out of bankruptcy protection
in 2003.
In November, Videsh Sanchar Nigam, an Indian long-distance phone company
owned by the Tata group, announced its decision to buy Tyco
International's undersea cable network for $130 million.
There is suddenly more bandwidth going around at home, too. Bharti has
laid down more than 30,000 kilometers, or 18,645 miles, of fiber-optic
cable across India; Reliance has installed about 128,000 kilometers.
Some of the growth in capacity is helping India's computer software and
call-center industries satiate their appetite for voice and data
transmission. Some of it is being used by Indian companies as they
modernize. For example, banks need bandwidth to run their ATM networks;
fleet operators need it to track the movement of their trucks.
Capacity that is left over is allowing individual consumers in the world's
second-fastest growing major economy after China to get affordable access
to phone and wireless Internet services. In 1995, mobile tariffs in India
averaged 46 U.S. cents a minute; they're down to 2 cents a minute now.
India has 49 million cellular users, according to the phone-services
regulator.
Bharti began a broadband Internet service for $11 a month in northern
India last month. The price is competitive by global standards: America
Online offers broadband for $14.95 a month.
Indian
broadband prices will fall as competition increases. That will bring
high-speed data transmission within reach of more Indians - not just in
urban areas and not only for entertainment.
"Broadband isn't about electronic games or video streaming," Sam
Pitroda, a member of the government's National Advisory Council, said at a
conference in New Delhi in October. "For India, it means e-governance
and e-education."
Village accountants in the southern province of Karnataka, whose capital,
Bangalore, is now globally known for its software exports, are using
handheld computers to capture crop patterns, reducing the time the
government takes to collate such information to 30 days from one year.
As connectivity spreads, updated land records, which farmers need to get
bank loans, can be accessed via the Internet. Farmers can access the
records without having to bribe anyone.
Broadband has been modestly defined by the Indian telecommunications
regulator as any "always-on" connection that offers an Internet
download speed of at least 256 kilobits per second (kbps). Western
consumers, increasingly used to accessing information at eight times that
speed or faster, might balk at such a slow service. For India's fishermen,
it's likely to be worth the wait as their productivity and earnings rise.
That would be a victory for Adam Smith's "invisible hand" and a
blow to all those who say markets don't work for the poor.
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